Table of Contents
Abstract
The Holmes-Rahe Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS) is a seminal psychological inventory developed by Thomas H. Holmes and Richard H. Rahe in 1967. Its primary function is to quantify the cumulative impact of major life stressors experienced by an individual, typically over the preceding twelve months, through the assignment of weighted numerical values known as Life Change Units (LCUs).
The fundamental premise of the SRRS is that any life event requiring significant behavioral and emotional adaptation, regardless of whether it is perceived positively or negatively, contributes to overall psychological and physiological stress. The resulting total LCU score serves as a critical predictive indicator of an individual’s susceptibility to developing subsequent psychosomatic illness or stress-related health issues. Scores are interpreted across established thresholds (low, medium, high) to assess the immediate risk level.
Keywords
Holmes-Rahe, SRRS, Life Change Units, LCU, Life Events, stress measurement, Health Risk Prediction, Social Readjustment, Psychosomatic illness.
Authors
Thomas H. Holmes, Richard H. Rahe.
Purpose
The central purpose of the SRRS is to provide an objective metric for measuring the magnitude of life change and crisis exposure within a recent timeframe. Holmes and Rahe sought to establish a clear, quantifiable relationship between these objective life events—which demand internal psychological and external behavioral adjustments—and the subsequent manifestation of physical illness or disease.
Beyond diagnosis, the total LCU score serves an educational function, raising awareness regarding the level of accumulated stress exposure and the associated correlative probability of experiencing stress-induced health consequences. The scale’s predictive scope covers a wide range of potential health problems, from minor psychosomatic symptoms like tension headaches and sleep disturbances to more serious conditions such as ulcers and chronic pain.
Construct
The core psychological concept underlying the SRRS is Social Readjustment, which is operationalized and quantified using Life Change Units (LCUs). The scale operates on the hypothesis that the necessity of changing one’s daily life patterns and functioning—the essence of social readjustment—is the root cause of the stress load, irrespective of the event’s hedonic tone (positive or negative).
The methodology assumes that the cumulative impact of multiple life events occurring within a brief period is the most significant predictor of future health outcomes. The LCU weights assigned to the 43 specific events were empirically derived through a scaling procedure where participants rated the necessary degree of adjustment, using ‘Marriage’ (assigned 50 LCUs) as the anchor point for comparison.
Validity
Original research supporting the SRRS primarily established its predictive validity through prospective studies. These studies consistently demonstrated a correlation between high cumulative LCU scores and an increased incidence of subsequent health issues. For instance, research conducted on military personnel indicated that higher LCU totals in the preceding year were statistically associated with a greater frequency of medical consultations and illnesses during subsequent deployment periods.
However, the SRRS faces notable criticisms regarding its construct validity. Critics point out its failure to incorporate crucial mediating variables, such as the individual’s subjective appraisal of the event (how stressful they personally found it), their available coping mechanisms, or the presence of chronic, low-level background stressors. While the SRRS effectively measures the density of objective life change, later instruments, like the Schedule of Recent Events, were developed to improve validity by integrating subjective ratings of event impact and desirability.
Reliability
The initial reliability of the SRRS rests on the high inter-rater reliability observed during the derivation of the LCU weights. The original cohort of 394 participants displayed a strong consensus when asked to rate the relative magnitude of Social Readjustment required for each of the 43 events, suggesting that the assigned weights are stable across a standard population.
The reliability of individual scores is often compromised by recall bias, as respondents must retrospectively recall and list major events over a full 12-month period. Furthermore, because the SRRS is an inventory of occurrences rather than a measure of a stable psychological trait, traditional test-retest reliability measures are only applicable over very short intervals, before new life events accrue or old events fall outside the designated time window.
Factor Analysis
Despite being intended primarily as a unidimensional measure that yields a single total cumulative LCU score, the 43 items of the SRRS have been subjected to various factor analytic studies. These analyses typically reveal several underlying factors, suggesting that the scale covers distinct, yet related, domains of stress exposure rather than a singular homogenous concept.
Commonly extracted factors include clusters such as ‘Marital and Family Adjustments,’ ‘Financial and Legal Events,’ and ‘Occupational and Professional Changes.’ Although these factor structures confirm the broad coverage of the scale, most clinical and academic applications continue to prioritize the total, summative LCU score, as it remains the most robust overall predictor of general susceptibility to psychosomatic illness.
Instrument
Test Type: Self-report retrospective inventory (Life Event Stress Scale)
Format: Checklist of 43 weighted major life events, requiring summation of corresponding points (LCUs).
Language Available: Primarily English; numerous translations and culturally adapted versions exist globally.
Population Group: General adult population.
Age Group: Typically utilized for adolescents through older adulthood.
Population Details: Applicable to individuals capable of accurately recalling and tallying major life events occurring within the previous 12 months. Results are strictly intended as a guide to health awareness and are presented for educational purposes only, not as a definitive clinical diagnosis.
Test Methodology: Respondents review the standardized list of 43 events and check off those experienced in the past year. The corresponding Life Change Units (LCUs) are summed to calculate a total score, which is interpreted against established thresholds to predict the probability of stress-related illness.
Keywords
Life Change Units, SRRS scoring, health risk assessment, LCU weights, major life events, life pressure, predictive scale, objective stress measure.
Authors
Author ORCID Identifier: N/A
Affiliation Email addresses: N/A
Correspondence Address: N/A
Permissions & Fee and Test Year
The original Holmes-Rahe Social Readjustment Rating Scale was published in 1967. It is widely used in academic research, educational settings, and non-commercial clinical practice. Due to its age and widespread acceptance, the scale is generally considered to be in the public domain for standard, non-commercial utilization, and typically requires no licensing fee.
Test Year: 1967
Reference’s
Holmes TH, Rahe RH (1967). ‘The Social Readjustment Rating Scale’. Jnl. Psychosom. Res. 11 (2): 213-8.
Items of the Holmes-Rahe Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS)
IMPORTANT: The following scale items must be preserved in their original language and must not be changed in any way.
The scale requires respondents to check off major life events experienced in the past 12 months and sum the corresponding stress scores (Life Change Units).
SCORE SCALE INTERPRETATION:
- 0-149 Low susceptibility to stress-related illness
- 150-299 Medium susceptibility to stress-related illness
- 300 and over High susceptibility to stress-related illness
The following table presents the 43 weighted life events:
__ Death of Spouse | 100 |
__ Divorce | 73 |
__ Marital Separation | 65 |
__ Jail Term | 63 |
__ Death of close family member | 63 |
__ Personal injury or illness | 53 |
__ Marriage | 50 |
__ Fired from work | 47 |
__ Marital reconciliation | 45 |
__ Retirement | 45 |
__ Change in family member’s health | 44 |
__ Pregnancy | 40 |
__ Sex difficulties | 39 |
__ Addition to family | 39 |
__ Business readjustment | 39 |
__ Change in financial status | 38 |
__ Death of close friend | 37 |
__ Change to a different line of work | 36 |
__ Change in number of marital arguments | 35 |
__ Mortgage or loan over $10‚000 | 34 |
__ Foreclosure of mortgage or loan | 30 |
__ Change in work responsibilities | 29 |
__ Trouble with in-laws | 29 |
__ Outstanding personal achievement | 28 |
__ Spouse begins or stops work | 26 |
__ Starting or finishing school | 26 |
__ Change in living conditions | 25 |
__ Revision of personal habits | 24 |
__ Trouble with boss | 23 |
__ Change in work hours‚ conditions | 20 |
__ Change in residence | 20 |
__ Change in schools | 20 |
__ Change in recreational habits | 19 |
__ Change in church activities | 19 |
__ Change in social activities | 18 |
__ Mortgage or loan under $10‚000 | 17 |
__ Change in sleeping habits | 16 |
__ Change in number of family gatherings | 15 |
__ Change in eating habits | 15 |
__ Vacation | 13 |
__ Christmas season | 12 |
__ Minor violation of the law | 11 |
Cite this article
Mohammed looti (2025). Holmes-Rahe Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS). Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. Retrieved from https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/holmes-rahe-social-readjustment-rating-scale-srrs/
Mohammed looti. "Holmes-Rahe Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS)." Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, 2 Nov. 2025, https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/holmes-rahe-social-readjustment-rating-scale-srrs/.
Mohammed looti. "Holmes-Rahe Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS)." Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, 2025. https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/holmes-rahe-social-readjustment-rating-scale-srrs/.
Mohammed looti (2025) 'Holmes-Rahe Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS)', Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. Available at: https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/holmes-rahe-social-readjustment-rating-scale-srrs/.
[1] Mohammed looti, "Holmes-Rahe Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS)," Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, vol. X, no. Y, ص Z-Z, November, 2025.
Mohammed looti. Holmes-Rahe Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS). Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. 2025;vol(issue):pages.